Recreation Of Star Spangled Banner To Be Stitched By Defenders Day

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — Baltimore has a central role in America’s history as the home of the Star Spangled Banner. Now the flag flying over Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore is being recreated.

Pat Warren has more on the project.

Perfect pitch and precision stitch. Those are the elements of the Fourth of July celebration at Fort McHenry.

The recreation of the original 30 x 40 foot Star Spangled Banner is the central theme this year.

“A man looking on these shores was inspired to write those words that unite our country,” the mayor said of Francis Scott Key’s poem written during the Battle of Baltimore in the War of 1812. “It makes me proud as a Baltimorean.”

The flag is a project of the Maryland Historical Society, and volunteers–including Cathy Gray of Glen Burnie–are on deadline to get it done in six weeks. The same time it took Mary Pickersgill and four helpers to sew the original Star Spangled Banner in 1813.

“The ones that are flown these days,” Gray explained, “they’re five-pointed stars and they always have the two legs standing like this. Well, the stars on the Star Spangled Banner were actually kind of cantered this way and that is referred to as spangling.”